Numbness and sensory disturbance

Numbness and sensory disturbance


Sensory symptoms are very common, occurring in about 8% of the general population. Sensory symptoms and signs alone may lead to a diagnosis. They can also be very helpful in clarifying the diagnosis in patients with other symptoms and signs. However, sensory symptoms and signs are ‘softer’ than many other neurological symptoms and can occur without an established underlying cause.


Sensory symptoms and signs do not occur in diseases that solely affect muscle, the neuromuscular junction or anterior horn cell. Their presence therefore excludes these diagnoses (unless another incidental reason can be found for them).




Clinical features


Numbness, tingling or pins and needles are the commonest sensory symptoms. The terms mean different things to different patients: you need to establish what the patient means, the distribution of sensory loss and the time course of the problem.






What is it?


Sensory symptoms can be broadly divided into:




Patients will often describe sensory disturbance as ‘numbness’ and this term alone can be used to mean:





A limb may be described as numb when it is in fact weak, or vice versa.


Tingling or pins and needles can usually be readily recognized as a distinct sensory symptom. Usually this can be localized more accurately than other positive symptoms.


Loss of joint position sense (proprioception) is more likely to be described as clumsiness or unsteadiness or like having a tight bandage on rather than numbness. Cortical sensory loss is usually noticed because of the disturbance in function, with clumsiness or incoordination more prominent than sensory symptoms.


Negative sensory symptoms, or the finding of sensory loss without associated symptoms discovered on examination, occur particularly in the following situations:


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Jun 10, 2016 | Posted by in NEUROLOGY | Comments Off on Numbness and sensory disturbance

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